Synaptic plasticity is regulated by the collective endocytosis, membrane recycling, and degradation of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs), yet the specific intracellular trafficking pathways available to AMPARs, and the mechanism by which such pathways are selected for AMPARs in neurons, is poorly understood. Here we show that the AMPAR subunit GLR-1 in C. elegans utilizes the retrograde transport pathway to regulate its synaptic abundance. GLR-1 is localized on post-synaptic membranes, where it regulates reversals of locomotion in a simple behavioral circuit. GLR-1 synaptic abundance is regulated by a combination of endocytosis and membrane recycling, although the specific pathways have not been fully elucidated. One possible pathway is retrograde transport via Rab6 GTPases and the retromer complex, which shepherd certain membrane proteins from endosomes back to Golgi; in the absence of retrograde transport, cargo proteins are degraded. We find that in mutants for
rab-6.2, or the retromer genes
vps-35,
snx-1, and
rme-8, GLR-1::GFP receptors are degraded in neurons, and mutant animals show behavioral defects indicative of diminished GLR-1 function. By contrast, expression of a constitutively active RAB-6.2 drives the retrograde transport of GLR-1 back to cell body Golgi. Mutations that block endocytosis suppress the effects of
rab-6.2 mutations, suggesting that RAB-6.2 functions downstream of GLR-1 endocytosis. Mutations that block GLR-1 turnover in
rab-6.2 mutants cause the accumulation of GLR-1 in endosomes, suggesting that GLR-1 is directed to lysosomes when retrograde trafficking is blocked. MIG-14, which undergoes retrograde recycling, undergoes a similar degradation in
rab-6.2 mutants, consistent with a loss of retrograde transport. In its GTP-bound state, RAB-6.2 physically interacts with, colocalizes with, and directs the subcellular localization of the PDZ/PTB domain protein LIN-10, and the regulation of GLR-1 retrograde transport by RAB-6.2 requires LIN-10 activity. Specific retrograde cargo and a function for the retromer in neurons have not been previously demonstrated. Our results indicate that RAB-6.2 and LIN-10 recycle AMPARs along a retrograde transport pathway in neurons so as to maintain synaptic strength.